amazon.aws.aws_ssm lookup – Get the value for a SSM parameter or all parameters under a path.

Note

This lookup plugin is part of the amazon.aws collection (version 2.3.0).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install amazon.aws.

To use it in a playbook, specify: amazon.aws.aws_ssm.

Synopsis

  • Get the value for an Amazon Simple Systems Manager parameter or a hierarchy of parameters. The first argument you pass the lookup can either be a parameter name or a hierarchy of parameters. Hierarchies start with a forward slash and end with the parameter name. Up to 5 layers may be specified.

  • If looking up an explicitly listed parameter by name which does not exist then the lookup will return a None value which will be interpreted by Jinja2 as an empty string. You can use the `default` filter to give a default value in this case but must set the second parameter to true (see examples below)

  • When looking up a path for parameters under it a dictionary will be returned for each path. If there is no parameter under that path then the return will be successful but the dictionary will be empty.

  • If the lookup fails due to lack of permissions or due to an AWS client error then the aws_ssm will generate an error, normally crashing the current ansible task. This is normally the right thing since ignoring a value that IAM isn’t giving access to could cause bigger problems and wrong behaviour or loss of data. If you want to continue in this case then you will have to set up two ansible tasks, one which sets a variable and ignores failures one which uses the value of that variable with a default. See the examples below.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the local controller node that executes this lookup.

  • python >= 3.6

  • boto3 >= 1.15.0

  • botocore >= 1.18.0

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

bypath

boolean

A boolean to indicate whether the parameter is provided as a hierarchy.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

decrypt

boolean

A boolean to indicate whether to decrypt the parameter.

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

on_denied

string

added in 2.0.0 of amazon.aws

Action to take if access to the SSM parameter is denied.

error will raise a fatal error when access to the SSM parameter is denied.

skip will silently ignore the denied SSM parameter.

warn will skip over the denied SSM parameter but issue a warning.

Choices:

  • error ← (default)

  • skip

  • warn

on_missing

string

added in 2.0.0 of amazon.aws

Action to take if the SSM parameter is missing.

error will raise a fatal error when the SSM parameter is missing.

skip will silently ignore the missing SSM parameter.

warn will skip over the missing SSM parameter but issue a warning.

Choices:

  • error ← (default)

  • skip

  • warn

recursive

boolean

A boolean to indicate whether to retrieve all parameters within a hierarchy.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

shortnames

boolean

Indicates whether to return the name only without path if using a parameter hierarchy.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

Examples

# lookup sample:
- name: lookup ssm parameter store in the current region
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello' ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter store in nominated region
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello', region='us-east-2' ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter store without decrypted
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello', decrypt=False ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter store in nominated aws profile
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello', aws_profile='myprofile' ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter store using explicit aws credentials
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello', aws_access_key=my_aws_access_key, aws_secret_key=my_aws_secret_key, aws_security_token=my_security_token ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter store with all options.
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'Hello', decrypt=false, region='us-east-2', aws_profile='myprofile') }}"

- name: lookup a key which doesn't exist, returns ""
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'NoKey') }}"

- name: lookup a key which doesn't exist, returning a default ('root')
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'AdminID') | default('root', true) }}"

- name: lookup a key which doesn't exist failing to store it in a fact
  set_fact:
    temp_secret: "{{ lookup('aws_ssm', '/NoAccess/hiddensecret') }}"
  ignore_errors: true

- name: show fact default to "access failed" if we don't have access
  debug: msg="{{ 'the secret was:' ~ temp_secret | default('could not access secret') }}"

- name: return a dictionary of ssm parameters from a hierarchy path
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', '/PATH/to/params', region='ap-southeast-2', bypath=true, recursive=true ) }}"

- name: return a dictionary of ssm parameters from a hierarchy path with shortened names (param instead of /PATH/to/param)
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', '/PATH/to/params', region='ap-southeast-2', shortnames=true, bypath=true, recursive=true ) }}"

- name: Iterate over a parameter hierarchy (one iteration per parameter)
  debug: msg='Key contains {{ item.key }} , with value {{ item.value }}'
  loop: '{{ lookup("aws_ssm", "/demo/", region="ap-southeast-2", bypath=True) | dict2items }}'

- name: Iterate over multiple paths as dictionaries (one iteration per path)
  debug: msg='Path contains {{ item }}'
  loop: '{{ lookup("aws_ssm", "/demo/", "/demo1/", bypath=True)}}'

- name: lookup ssm parameter and fail if missing
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'missing-parameter', on_missing="error" ) }}"

- name: lookup ssm parameter warn if access is denied
  debug: msg="{{ lookup('aws_ssm', 'missing-parameter', on_denied="warn" ) }}"

Authors

  • Bill Wang <ozbillwang(at)gmail.com>

  • Marat Bakeev <hawara(at)gmail.com>

  • Michael De La Rue

Hint

Configuration entries for each entry type have a low to high priority order. For example, a variable that is lower in the list will override a variable that is higher up.